Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020438 (hypercalciuria)
2,502 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Anorexia, constipation, vomiting and somnolence in a 39-year-old woman were at first misinterpreted as being of psychological and autonomic nervous system origin. Further clinical and biochemical tests revealed hyperthyroidism associated with hypercalcaemia and hypercalciuria. Thyrostatic treatment for 12 days caused regression of the hypercalcaemia and, after subtotal resection, serum calcium levels and urinary calcium excretion returned to normal for good. The hypercalcaemia syndrome must therefore be assumed to have been the direct result of the hyperthyroidism.
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PMID:[Hyperthyroidism with hypercalcaemia (author's transl)]. 5 61

Four patients having high-level quadriplegia developed elevated serum calcium concentrations (11 to 15.8 mg/100 ml) within three months of injury. All were young males (ages 15 to 19 years) and quadriplegic (C4-C7). Presenting symptoms were nausea, vomiting, polydipsia, polyuria and lethargy. In two patients severe muscle wasting and cachexia with clinical symptoms developed and persisted for several months. Laboratory studies in all patients showed negative calcium balance with hypercalciuria. Reduced renal function was seen in all patients but returned to normal with return of normal serum calcium. Alkaline phosphatase level was normal in three and elevated in one. Serum parathormone levels were normal. Roentgenograms revealed diffuse demineralization. Nephrocalcinosis and soft tissue calcifications developed in one patient. Primary treatment included reduced calcium intake, correction of dehydration, sodium infusion and remobilization. Corticosteroids, oral phosphates, furosemide and mithramycin were used with varying success to control prologned symptoms and severe hypercalcemia.
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PMID:Immobilization hypercalcemia in spinal cord injury. 83 59

Nineteen children with clinical diagnoses of renal tubular acidosis were followed for periods ranging from 3 months to 20 years. Twelve patients had Type 1 renal tubular acidosis, five had Type 2, and two had Type 4. No sex predilection was found for any one of the types. Most patients had been diagnosed before 18 months of age, with failure to thrive the most common presentation. Tachypnea, polydipsia, polyuria, and vomiting were frequent symptoms. Some of these children had associated renal hypoplasia, vesicoureteral reflux, unilateral renal agenesis, glomerulocystic disease, adult polycystic kidney disease, and cyanotic congenital heart disease. Urinary anion gap may be useful for differential diagnosis of altered distal urinary acidification from other hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis. Furosemide test may need further investigation. Inability to raise urine to blood pCO2 gradient is helpful for diagnosis of Type 1 renal tubular acidosis. Hypokalemia, hypocalcemia, hypophosphatemia, decreased tubular reabsorption of phosphate, and hypercalciuria occurred in some patients. Complications included rickets in two, nephrocalcinosis in one, and episodic hematuria in one. There was relative bicarbonate wasting in children with Type 1 renal tubular acidosis, with a mean therapeutic bicarbonate requirement of 4.4 +/- 2.6 meq/kg/day. The mean bicarbonate dose for patients with Type 2 renal tubular acidosis was 8.3 +/- 2.6 meq/kg/day. Most children had good response to treatment with complete catch-up linear growth in 13, improved growth in 4, and continuing poor growth in 2. Two patients died during follow-up. Two other patients maintained normal growth without medication.
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PMID:Renal tubular acidosis in childhood. 226 80

A congenital hypokalemic tubular disorder is described with many features resembling Bartter syndrome. Additional features include prenatal onset with polyhydramnios and premature labor; failure to thrive; episodes of fever, vomiting, diarrhea, and renal electrolyte and water wastage; hypercalciuria; nephrocalcinosis; and osteopenia. Unlike Bartter syndrome, there is no defect in tubular reabsorption of chloride. Urinary levels of prostaglandin E2 and 7 alpha-hydroxy-5,11-diketotetranorprosta-1,16-dioic acid are selectively elevated, indicating marked stimulation of renal and systemic PGE2 production. Chronic suppression of PGE2 activity by indomethacin corrects most of the abnormalities, and there is an immediate decompensation of the disease on indomethacin withdrawal. We conclude that these preterm infants have a distinct variety of hypokalemic tubular disorders rather than a variant of Bartter syndrome, because renal and systemic hyperprostaglandinism ranks high in the pathogenic chain of events, and the suppression of PGE2 hyperactivity is associated with significant improvement in the development (and probably in the prognosis) of the affected children.
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PMID:Congenital hypokalemia with hypercalciuria in preterm infants: a hyperprostaglandinuric tubular syndrome different from Bartter syndrome. 386 6

Hypercalcaemia can be caused by many disorders, but is most commonly due to primary hyperparathyroidism in outpatients, and to malignant disease in hospital inpatients. When mild (less than 3 mmol/L) it does not cause symptoms, but can have long term effects such as renal calculi. It is important that the aetiology of the hypercalcaemia be established, as it can reflect serious disease. In most patients the correct diagnosis can be suspected from clinical history and examination, and confirmed by laboratory tests and x-rays. The most difficult diagnostic problem is the patient with negative clinical findings, mild hypercalcaemia and mild renal impairment, when the parathyroid hormone level is normal or slightly elevated. When hypercalcaemia is severe (greater than 3.5 mmol/L), it can cause vomiting, polyuria, dehydration and renal impairment, and is then an important therapeutic problem. Therapy includes treatment of the cause, such as radiotherapy for malignant disease or surgery for primary hyperparathyroidism. In addition, it is usually necessary to treat the hypercalcaemia itself, and the initial step is always rehydration. If the plasma calcium concentration remains high, drug treatment must be added, the most effective and reliable agent being intravenous mithramycin. Aminohydroxypropylidene diphosphonate (APD), though less studied, may be equally useful in this situation. Glucocorticoids are not always effective, and phosphate may cause renal damage, particularly when given intravenously. For long term treatment of malignant hypercalcaemia, oral glucocorticoids and phosphate are often effective, and can be given in combination. When primary hyperparathyroidism cannot be corrected surgically, the hypercalcaemia (and hypercalciuria) are probably best treated with a low calcium diet and cellulose phosphate, a regimen also effective for the hypercalcaemia of sarcoidosis.
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PMID:Hypercalcaemia. What does it signify? 394 Aug 49

Two brothers, aged 16 and 11 years, had recurrent episodes of vomiting, diarrhoea and abdominal pain, starting in infancy. In spite of extensive investigations no cause of their enterocolitis could be established. After several years symptomatic treatment was discontinued without any recurrence of symptoms. Their father and several paternal relatives have had kidney stones. Both boys developed urolithiasis and an oxalate-containing stone was removed from the elder brother's kidney. He had no hypercalciuria. His glomerular and tubular function tests were normal. Gas chromatography of urine from both brothers revealed massive excretion of L-5-oxoproline (pyroglutamic acid). Glutathione levels in erythrocytes of both patients were normal. The activities of enzymes of the gamma-glutamyl cycle were analysed in erythrocytes, leukocytes and cultured skin fibroblasts. The level of glutathione synthetase was normal, as was the affinity of this enzyme for its substrate gamma-glutamyl-cysteine. Feedback inhibition of gamma-glutamyl-cysteine synthetase by glutathione was also normal. Both patients had a specific deficiency of 5-oxoprolinase, the activity of which was 2-4% of that of control subjects. Their parents had intermediate 5-oxoprolinase activities in fibroblasts, indicating a recessive mode of inheritance. Thus, 5-oxoprolinuria in these two patients was due to a lack of 5-oxoprolinase, i.e., a new inborn error in the gamma-glutamyl cycle.
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PMID:5-oxoprolinuria due to hereditary 5-oxoprolinase deficiency in two brothers--a new inborn error of the gamma-glutamyl cycle. 611 26

Six patients (3 children and 3 adults) with the clinical and biochemical features of Bartter's syndrome are presented. Pediatric cases included a more severe form, in one patient, with physical and mental retardation, hypercalciuria and nephrocalcinosis, and a less severe one, including two patients, with milder clinical features, low calcium and high magnesium excretion and hypomagnesiemia. Adult patients were affected by either the mild congenital form (case n. 4) or the acquired variety (cases n.5 and 6). Tubular function was investigated in the 3 adults by assessing clearance measurements during maximal diuresis. There was a defective fractional distal solute reabsorption (FDR) ranging between 0.52 and 0.60. This was well below the results obtained in one patient with psychogenous vomiting (FDR 0.94) and comparable to those in two patients with interstitial nephropathies caused by vesico-ureteral reflux (FDR 0.63 and 0.67 respectively). We concluded that: 1) the etiopathogenetic spectrum of Bartter's syndrome corresponds to different clinical presentation (mild, heavy, congenital or acquired varieties), and alterations in mineral and electrolyte renal handling; 2) reduction in FDR is a feature neither essential nor exclusive of this syndrome.
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PMID:[Bartter's syndrome in children and adults. Study of 6 cases]. 770 8

Sodium chloride deficiency (SCD) was observed within the 1st year of life in 12 of 46 cystic fibrosis (CF) patients between July 1989 and September 1992. All patients showed sweating, loss of appetite, fever, vomiting, irritation, dehydration, weakness, and cyanosis during an attack. Mean plasma sodium, potassium and chloride levels were 122.9 (range 106-135), 2.5 (range 1.6-3.5), and 73.3 (range 60-90) mEq/l respectively. Alkalosis and elevated plasma renin activity were detected in all patients. Of the patients, 50% showed microscopic haematuria, and hypercalciuria was detected in two out of four patients. Low urinary sodium and high urinary potassium were observed in the four examined patients. Increased creatinine, BUN and uric acid values returned to normal with treatment. All the patients were treated initially with intravenous fluids and electrolyte solutions. All patients were less than 7 months of age during the first attack, five received only breast milk and the others breast milk with formula milk. Their oral salt supplement was 2-4 mEq/kg per day, which is recommended for CF patients, but could be deficient in excessively sweating infants. The genotype of these patients might be cause of high salt losses. F508 is the most common mutation with the frequency of 38% in our CF patients with SCD, but the frequency of unknown mutations is high (54%).
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PMID:Sodium chloride deficiency in cystic fibrosis patients. 784 98

Hypomagnesemia in childhood is relatively frequently noted in the neonatal period due to maternal causes, such as decreased intake due to vomiting, overuse of laxatives, and neonatal causes such as intrauterine growth retardation, birth asphyxia and exchange transfusion. A very rare cause of neonatal magnesium deficiency is called primary hypomagnesemia caused by impaired intestinal absorption of magnesium. Reference values of serum magnesium in cord blood are slightly lowered. Erythrocyte magnesium content is also lowered in cord blood and during the first month after birth. Mononuclear magnesium content shows no differences with age. Renal magnesium loss is diagnosed by the presence of hypomagnesemia with an inappropriately high 24-hour urinary magnesium excretion. In isolated familial hypomagnesemia an autosomal dominant as well as an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance was found. The renal magnesium threshold is lowered in both forms but the tubular maximum is only lowered in the dominant form. In familial hypomagnesemia-hypokalemia (Gitelman syndrome) the renal magnesium threshold is lowered but the tubular maximum is in the normal range. In this syndrome, with probably an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance, the renal defect might be located in the distal nephron after the medullary part of the ascending limb of the loop of Henle. The magnesium content of mononuclear cells and erythrocytes is in the normal and lower normal range, respectively. In the familial hypomagnesemia-hypercalciuria syndrome, hypomagnesemia is always combined with hyperuricemia and nephrocalcinosis. Myopia and horizontal nystagmus are often present.
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PMID:Magnesium metabolism in childhood. 826 18

This report concerns an 11-year-old boy who manifested hypophosphatemic rickets associated with congenital microvillous atrophy (CMA). He had been suffering from vomiting and severe diarrhea from the first day of life and had been treated with total parenteral nutrition (TPN) since he was 67 days old. At 4 years of age, intestinal biopsy resulted in a diagnosis of CMA. He was admitted to our hospital complaining of leg pain at the age of 11. Laboratory data revealed hypophosphatemia, elevated serum 1, 25-dihydroxyvitamin D (1,25(OH)2D) levels, and hypercalciuria. A roentgenogram showed rickets in the extremities. A balance study of phosphate in urine and stool indicated that the amount of phosphate leaking into the stool was greater than that into the urine. Moreover, the total amount of phosphate leaking from both the intestine and kidney exceeded the amount of phosphate intake from TPN. The rickets was healed by increasing the phosphate concentration in TPN. This case is different from X-linked hypophosphatemic rickets but similar to hereditary hypophosphatemic rickets with hypercalciuria (HHRH) in terms of hypercalciuria and elevated serum 1,25(OH)2D levels. The effectiveness of phosphate treatments used here is also similar to that used for HHRH. However, this type of hypophosphatemic rickets is unique in that phosphate leaking into the intestine plays an important role in its pathogenesis.
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PMID:Hypophosphatemic rickets accompanying congenital microvillous atrophy. 984 14


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